Why Should I Buy From You?

Why would anyone want to do business with you? What's so special about you? What makes you think you're any different from anyone else? No, that's not your superego talking. It's just what your customers want to know about you. So what are you going to tell them?

In my last article, I spent a lot of time presenting to you the idea that words are more important than pictures. Yes, that contradicts a lot of conventional wisdom, but now you understand the need people have for you to present the right words to them. Not only is that supported by hard research, but it has a concrete basis in the structure of the brain.

So the next obvious question is, "What words?" Remember W.I.I.F.M., the station every one of us wants to hear, what's in it for me? Choose the words that make your prospects realize that what they really want is what you actually offer.

What Is Your USP?

What simple statement about your business or brand -- just a quick, clear sentence or two at most -- tells your prospects that you are the only alternative for them? Sounds like a response should just jump out at you. Yet most businesses (on- and offline) cannot provide an answer that simply rolls off their tongues or, even more appropriately in the case of e-commerce, appears on their home pages.

By USP, or unique selling proposition, I don't mean a slogan or a phrase that will appear in your advertising, although that's one potential use for it. Rather I mean the concise and memorable phrase that answers your prospect's always-implicit question, "Why should I do business with you and not somebody else?" You may have a hot thing right now, but if you cannot concisely and powerfully describe the unique value of your business for your prospects (and create some excitement among potential buyers), you may not truly have a basis for long-term success.

Helping You Identify Your USP

Write down every possible reason you can find why someone should want to do business with your firm. If you want real results, involve your entire company in a high-energy brainstorming session. If you don't find at least a few dozen reasons, either you aren't trying very hard or you have a very boring company. Don't be afraid to get professional help. Your survival can depend on it. Afterward, review the list and eliminate everything that is also true of your competitors. Nothing should be allowed to remain on the list that can also be claimed by a competitor. Some quick guidelines:

What is unique about your business or brand versus your direct competitors?

Which of these factors are most important to your propects?

Which of these factors are most difficult for your competitors to imitate?

Which of these factors can be most easily understood by your prospects?

Now create a memorable message out of these unique, meaningful qualities about your business or brand. And make sure it's a message that speaks to the need your prospective customer feels, not some self-centered stuff about you.

If you've been in business for a while, you may have created a USP without realizing it. For example, if you decided to provide live, 24-hour customer service to your customers because no one else is doing it, you've created at least a partial USP based on service, and you are communicating that to your intended target buyer. If, however, everyone else does it, too, then it's not something that sets you apart and should not be the focus of your USP.

Good service, good selection, fair prices, and honest dealing are not relevant factors for creating your USP. Now you must be tempted to ask me why. Simply stated, these are factors your prospects already have in mind; they expect and demand them. So telling them to your prospects gives them the same feeling you get when a used car salesman says, "Let me be honest with you..." You expect honesty. Was he lying to you the rest of the time?

Why You Need a USP

Wow, where do I start?

People are bombarded with sales messages all the time. If you can't cut through the clutter immediately to offer them something that has obvious value to them, they'll be long gone to someone who can.

Nowadays a lot of prospects have very short attention spans and even shorter memories, and they are jaded. You must make your USP strong, simple, quick, and clear -- immediately, when prospects first hit your site. If you don't have a strong USP and don't state it clearly right upfront, you're sending your traffic elsewhere instead of drawing them deeper into your own sales funnel.

Want to learn more? Attend ClickZ Live New York March 30 - April 1. With over 15 years' experience delivering industry-leading events, ClickZ Live brings together over 60 expert speakers to offer an action-packed, educationally-focused agenda covering all aspects of digital marketing. Register today!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bryan Eisenberg is co-founder and chief marketing officer (CMO) of IdealSpot. He is co-author of the Wall Street Journal, Amazon, BusinessWeek, and New York Times best-selling books Call to Action, Waiting For Your Cat to Bark?, and Always Be Testing, and Buyer Legends. Bryan is a keynote speaker and has keynoted conferences globally such as Gultaggen, Shop.org, Direct Marketing Association, MarketingSherpa, Econsultancy, Webcom, the Canadian Marketing Association, and others for the past 10 years. Bryan was named a winner of the Marketing Edge's Rising Stars Awards, recognized by eConsultancy members as one of the top 10 User Experience Gurus, selected as one of the inaugural iMedia Top 25 Marketers, and has been recognized as most influential in PPC, Social Selling, OmniChannel Retail. Bryan serves as an advisory board member of several venture capital backed companies such as Sightly, UserTesting, Monetate, ChatID, Nomi, and BazaarVoice. He works with his co-author and brother Jeffrey Eisenberg. You can find them at BryanEisenberg.com.

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